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The Vision of the Common Core: Embracing the Challenge. UCDMP Saturday Series 2013-2014 Secondary Session 4 March 15, 2014. Agenda. Morning: Grades 7-12 Welcome, Introductions and a Problem Assessing Student Learning: Rubrics Finding , Adapting and Creating Rubrics
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The Vision of the Common Core: Embracing the Challenge UCDMP Saturday Series 2013-2014 Secondary Session 4 March 15, 2014
Agenda • Morning: Grades 7-12 • Welcome, Introductions and a Problem • Assessing Student Learning: Rubrics • Finding, Adapting and Creating Rubrics • Afternoon: Grades 6-8 and 9-12 • Sharing Successes • Enhancing Classroom Dialogue: Constructing Arguments and Critiquing the Reasoning of Others • Accessing Resources for SMP 3 • Feedback and Reflection
PRECISION PIZZA • A) Usually each person in a math study group eats a small round pepperoni pizza with a 6 inch diameter. There are five people in the study group and they want to share one pizza. Precision Pizza will make a round pizza of any diameter. To the nearest half inch, what is the diameter of the pizza that should be ordered from Precision Pizza so that everyone gets the usual amount? Show the work that leads to your answer. • B) Rather than ordering one large pizza, the students decide to order two pizzas, each with half the area of the large pizza. Joshua said that the sum of the circumferences of the two smaller pizzas was equal to the circumference of the large pizza. Barbara claimed he was mistaken. Who was right? Explain your answer.
Precision Pizza:Grading on a 4-point scale • In your group, talk about how this problem should be graded. • What are the big ideas in this problem? • What procedures or skills should students be using correctly? • What should constitute full credit? Partial credit?
What do you think? • What are some of the methods that you have used to assign a grade to student understanding? How effective were they? • Think about it and jot down 3 methods • Share your methods with your shoulder partner • As a pair, choose one method to share with your table • Share with other pairs at your table
Today’s Focus: Rubrics • Read and annotate “Guide to Scoring Rubrics” *things you think are key ideas/important ? things you have questions about, or want to know more about !things you agree with - Things you do not completely agree with
Check them out • As a table group, discuss and prepare to present your rubric What type of rubric is it? What are the pros and cons of the rubric? How might you use the rubric? How might you improve the rubric? Other comments about the rubric and/or it’s usefulness
PRECISION PIZZA revisited • Which Rubric would you use to score and why?
Create your own rubric • RubiStar: http://rubistar.4teachers.org/
Smarter Balanced Performance Task Specs • Scoring requirements • …to achieve score ranges for performance tasks that reflect the amount of work (and evidence) produced, every task will lead to scores for individual students with a total task score range equivalent to that of several constructed-response questions combined. For any particular task, this will be achieved by totaling points across scorable products, task parts/components, or product attributes, and not by a single holistic score. • from Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium: Performance Task Specifications, April 16, 2012
Katie’s Pattern • Work out the Katie’s Pattern Task on your own • Review the Rubric on your own, and then with a partner • What questions do you have? • Score the T4 paper on your own, using the Rubric • Compare your score with your partner’s score
Scoring Standard Mastery • Choose a grade level, or course • Choose a standard, or cluster • Write a Standard Mastery Rubric
Afternoon Sessions-12:45 • Middle School: upstairs to the third floor…Rm 3106 • High School: here in Rm 1147 • At the end of the session, we will all end up here to turn in reflection forms, sign out and pick up PD certificates*. • *PD certificate CANNOT be reissued. Please pick your up and save it.
Sharing Success • This year, we have asked you to try out the ideas from the sessions in your classroom. We are all at different places in the transition to the Common Core and it is our belief that we all benefit from hearing where other teachers are at, both successes and struggles.
Sharing Success • At your table, please share your attempts to bring your classroom/school/district more in line with the CCSS-M. • Topics from the previous sessions include: • Using SBAC materials • Assessment FOR learning • Planning for Big Ideas • Using Mathematical Tasks • Incorporating Technology • Using Games • Building on Prior Knowledge
Planning • For the rest of the session (until 3:45) work with your group to access tasks/lessons that will help you with SMP 3 Construct Viable Arguments and Critique the Reasoning of Others. If the resources don’t supply rubrics, see if one of the rubrics discussed earlier will work. If not, how can you adapt one of them so that it fits? • Explore resources and plan for implementation. • Plan to share out a summary of what you found and how you will use it.
Resources • SBAC • Mathematics Assessment Project • Illustrative Mathematics • Inside Mathematics • Mathematics Vision Project • Engage NY • Georgia Department of Education • Illinois Curriculum Model Units
Summer Opportunities for 7-12 Teachers • SAIM: Math Academy for teachers (and kids) grades 6-8 • June 16-20 Learning and Planning (40 teachers) (DJUSD) • June 23-27 Implementing with KIDS! (10 teachers) (UCD) • Chance Encounters: Statistics and Probability in grades 7-12 • July 14-18 (Vacaville District Office) • Bay Area math Project-Transformational Geometry grades 7-12 • June 16-20 (American Canyon HS)
Feedback and Reflection • Please fill out the feedback form and turn it in as you sign out. • Resources from todays sessions will be available at the UCDMP resource link at http://education.ucdavis.edu/ucdmp-resources. • Thank you for coming and see you in May!